- are
elongate relative to
those of
living rhinoceroses. The
earliest paraceratheres like
Juxia were
comparable in size with
living rhinoceroses with a body...
- P.
namadicus possibly the
largest land
mammal ever,
exceeding even
paraceratheres in size. However,
Larramendi stated that is
estimate should be "taken...
- the brontotheres, palaeotheres, chalicotheres, and the
paraceratheres, with the
paraceratheres including the
largest known land
mammals to have ever existed...
-
Urtinotherium (meaning "Urtyn beast") is an
extinct genus of
paracerathere mammals. It was a
large animal that was
closely related to Paraceratherium...
-
Vertebrata PalAsiatica. 41 (3): 220–229. Z. Qiu; B. Wang (2007). "
Paracerathere Fossils of China".
Palaeontologia Sinica. New
Series C (29): 1–396....
-
known to have
generally coexisted with
paraceratheres, and
there are no
known co-occurrences
between paraceratheres and the
large deinotheres,
which would...
- more
closely related to
crown Rhinocerotoidea than to
hyracodonts or
paraceratheres.
Eggysodonts were ground-dwelling browsers,
being largely the size of...
- Z.; Wang, B. (2007). "Juxia Chow et Chiu ( = Zhou et Qiu), 1964".
Paracerathere Fossils of
China (in
Chinese (China) and English). Vol. 29. Beijing:...
-
million and the
extinction of
other rhinocertoid groups such as the
giant paraceratheres.
During the
early Miocene epoch,
around 20
million years ago rhinocerotids...
-
chiefly of
teeth and the
bones of the skull.
After the
extinction of the
paraceratheres at the Oligocene-Miocene transition, the
deinotheres were (and remained)...